The little back and forth about the title of Willem deVries’
book Hegel’s Theory of Mental Activity
got me thinking about the titles of my books, and I realized that no fewer than
seven of my books have titles that
are borrowed from other books, including one whose title is borrow from a book
by me!
The first was the little book Barrington Moore, Jr., Herbert
Marcuse, and I did in 1965, A Critique of
Pure Tolerance [a joke title proposed by Herbert.] This was followed by The Poverty of Liberalism in 1968.
This is actually a grandson title.
The original was Proudhon’s La
Philosophie de la Misère, to which Marx responded with La Misère de la Philosophie [i.e. The Poverty of Philosophy] on
which I then piggybacked. The next year,
I published The Ideal of the University,
a steal from John Cardinal Newman/s classic work The Idea of the University [or homage
as we say in the writing game]. The year
after that I brought out In Defense of
Anarchism, the title taken from a wonderful Mark Twain essay, “In Defense
of Harriet Shelley.” Then, in 1973, I
edited a forgettable collection of essays by various authors called 1984 Revisited. In ’85, having no better idea, I called my
book on Marx’s economic theories Understanding
Marx, an echo of my ’77 book Understanding
Rawls. Finally, in 2005, I published
Autobiography of an Ex-White Man, a
deliberate steal from and reference to the famous James Weldon Johnson novel Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man.
As I was writing all this, I was blithely unaware of my
habit of stealing titles. I am sure it
has some deep meaning, but I cannot for the life of me imagine what that is.